Issues with Leica, the company

If you think having MP and M-P being sold at the same time is not weird, then there's something wrong with you. Of course I'm talking about the names of the models only.
 
Some people simply have problems if a name has more than one letter or digit it seems. It turns out Leica was right in avoiding the M10 label One letter-two digits would have overwhelmed some users.🙄
 
I just looked at Nikon's website and pulled up all their DSLR's. There are 16 of them, and some of them have multiple buying options (like 'the filmmaker's kit', 'the animator's kit' etc). Gave me a headache looking at all the various 'D' bodies and their iterations.

Leica doesn't confuse me at all, and the various naming schemes don't personally bother me. If you find it confusing and upsetting, look away! Quite simple really.
 
I just looked at Nikon's website and pulled up all their DSLR's. There are 16 of them, and some of them have multiple buying options (like 'the filmmaker's kit', 'the animator's kit' etc). Gave me a headache looking at all the various 'D' bodies and their iterations.

Leica doesn't confuse me at all, and the various naming schemes don't personally bother me. If you find it confusing and upsetting, look away! Quite simple really.
What!!! Nikon's naming scheme is very logical. Now quick: Difference between an MP and a M-P. Quick....see wacko!!
 
Actually Leica revamped the naming scheme to resemble other technical objects - like Mercedes for instance or BMW. A Mercedes 500 S can be one of various models with the Wxxx types denoting the various chassis types over the years, etc. it appeals to the logical and tidy German mind, the more chaotic and pragmatic Anglo-Saxons and their colonial spinoffs will be confused by this type of systematic thinking.
 
Actually Leica revamped the naming scheme to resemble other technical objects - like Mercedes for instance or BMW. A Mercedes 500 S can be one of various models with the Wxxx types denoting the various chassis types over the years, etc. it appeals to the logical and tidy German mind, the more chaotic and pragmatic Anglo-Saxons and their colonial spinoffs will be confused by this type of systematic thinking.

That may be the official story (I don't know), but I just don't believe that is the true reason.

Why?

Over half a century of M mount cameras prior to the M240 - appropriately named products by far more logical German minds.

Stephen
 
Why should it make sense?
As it is it is quite logical. The letter denotes the type of camera and the number in the background the specific model.

Sometimes, for extra clarity or for marketing reasons there may be a nickname like Monochrom, or Safari, or Titanium, or even more of a complicating and confusing factor, given by customers like MM2 or M10 (the most confusing one of all as it will have the uninitiated searching for a nonexistent camera - however our Bartender is in the good company of Erwin Puts by using the designation colloquially)
 
Sometimes, for extra clarity or for marketing reasons there may be a nickname like Monochrom, or Safari, or Titanium ....

I think that`s my point really.
If there is a requirement for extra clarity it suggests that it isn`t sufficiently clear in the first case.
Until this new nomenclature was introduced there wasn`t a requirement for an additional naming structure for either clarity or marketing purposes.
 
Bothers me not at all. If I have to look something up, I look it up.

Consider the M sequence, not counting various specialized, low-production editions in all the different basic model production.

film:
M3
M2
M1
M4
M5
M4-2
M4-P
M6
M6TTL (0.72x, 0.58x, 0.85x)
M7
MP
M-A

digital:
M8
M8u
M8.2
M9
M9-P
M-E
M Monochrom
M typ 240
M-P typ 240
M Monochrom typ 246

I don't know what's so confusing. The M8 family has three models in it, the M9 family has four models in it. The typ 240/246 succeeds the M9 and has three models. The M-A is a film MP without a meter, in essence. What's for sale today, new production, are M7, MP, and M-A in film and M-E, M/M-P typ 240, M Monochrom typ 246 in digital. Seven models ...

Surely photographers who keep a half dozen different film types and characteristics, with sliding scales of time/temperature/dilution for different speeds and contrasts, in their head can remember seven camera models ... ?

G

Ahem. I wasn't even aware there were two different monochrome models already. Obviously I'm not the target audience, or I haven't been paying attention.

As for there being merely seven different models for sale, of course that's only counting new cameras, not the used market. And that's only right now. In six months it'll change again. But surely we should be expected to remember... Oh never mind.

~Joe
 
Why should it make sense?
As it is it is quite logical. The letter denotes the type of camera and the number in the background the specific model.

The new naming denotes a specific camera, but it doesn't explain a specific model. Leica started out with good intentions for the M3, but soon saw a flaw in their strategy. So they defaulted to a numerical progression that at least told customers when in the Leica catalogue it appeared. Leica have been quoted as wanting a new naming strategy similar to that used by the iconic Porsche company, hence Typ 240, then Typ 246 (presumably the new model of the M240, but maybe a backwards step because I hear people are complaining the colour output isn't very good). Meanwhile Porsche have gone from the Typ 996, to Typ 997, to the next logical step the Typ 991.... It all makes sense to aficionados, or people who work in the factory, but Typ numbers and T, Q, X, etc. are meaningless to most people just browsing for a new camera, and if their attention isn't grabbed immediately it's a potential lost sale. Why has Zeiss started giving it's premium lenses weird names for instance? Yes, well spotted, it's to make them memorable, to equate rave reviews with memories of seeing an advert for them. It all comes together in the buyers mind even before they look up the price. How different to the amorphous Leica derived names, I mean what does 'X' mean, what does it tell you? What does Typ 246 tell you?

V
 
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